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Pages in category "Mobile phones with an integrated hardware keyboard" The following 97 pages are in this category, out of 97 total.
Multi-touch touchscreen, QWERTY keyboard The BlackBerry Q10 is a touchscreen -based QWERTY smartphone developed by BlackBerry , previously known as RIM (Research In Motion). The BlackBerry Q10 is the second of two BlackBerry smartphones unveiled at the BlackBerry 10 event on January 30, 2013.
Nokia A303 [156] is a phone with QWERTY keypad input and a touchscreen. Armed with 1 GHz processor, upgraded Nokia Browser, 2.6-inch touchscreen, and Nokia Store. Apps are readily available for download. The phone is said to break the line between featurephones and smartphones. [154] Nokia A2000 is a China-specific featurephone with a QWERTY ...
The Nokia C3-00 is a QWERTY keypad feature phone with the Nokia Series 40 mobile operating system, released under the Cseries line of phones by Nokia. It features a full 4-line keyboard, like the earlier Nokia 6800 series. It was advertised as an entry-level messaging and social networking phone, retailing at 90 EUR before taxes.
Built-in 62 key QWERTY keyboard (Backlight Blue) Built-in 1.3 MP CMOS Camera with LED flash light - Can compose 2 MP 1600×1280 Image file, MPEG4 Video; Dual integrated cameras, both for still picture and video; 3 programmable buttons, 2 phone buttons, 5-way navigation button, Volume up/down button (2-way) Tri-band 900/1800/1900 MHz; UMTS 2100 MHz
The BlackBerry Torch 9800 is a 2010 model in the BlackBerry line of smartphones. It combines a physical QWERTY keyboard with a sliding multi-touch screen display and runs on BlackBerry OS 6. Introduced on August 3, 2010, the phone became available exclusively on AT&T on August 12, 2010. [4] [5]
The BlackBerry Torch 9800 is a 2010 model in the BlackBerry line of smartphones. It combines a physical QWERTY keyboard with a sliding multi-touch screen display and runs on BlackBerry OS 6. Introduced on August 3, 2010, the phone became available exclusively on AT&T on August 12, 2010. [4] [5]
The use of a QWERTY-like layout took advantage of people's memory of the computer keyboard, since each button was roughly relative to each key. At the same time, the size of the BlackBerry could be dramatically reduced, as keyboards only needed to be 5-buttons wide rather than 10-buttons wide.